How To Make A Convincing looking Plane Crash

Did you even just say that? What world do you live in that kerosene can't explode?

You invented your own definition of the word
"explode".
An explosion requires an oxidising agent.
Kerosene is straight fuel with no oxidising agent added.
You would have to add that to make it explode.
What kerosene can do is to burn rapidly if heated up enough.

ex·plo·sion noun \ik-ˈsplō-zhən\ : the sudden, loud, and violent release of energy that happens when something (such as a bomb) breaks apart
in a way that sends parts flying outward : a sudden and very fast increase : a sudden expression of some strong emotion Full Definition of EXPLOSION
1 : the act or an instance of exploding 2 : a large-scale, rapid, or spectacular expansion or bursting out or forth 3 : the release of occluded
breath that occurs in one kind of articulation of stop consonants

What have I defined, jmdewey? Apparently YOU are the one who doesn't know what explosion means.

BLAST WAVES are the result of an EXPLOSION.

blast wave - a region of high pressure travelling through a gas at a high velocity; "the explosion created a shock wave" Synonyms: shock wave

Jet fuel (kerosene) is a combustible liquid capable of exploding, producing a blast wave. The OXIDIZING AGENT is LIQUID OXYGEN.

There are other chemicals that are oxidizing materials. For example, liquid air has been involved in many explosions because of its oxidizing
properties. Liquid air itself has about 30% oxygen which makes it a powerful oxidant. However, when liquid air evaporates, it becomes richer in oxygen
content when more volatile components evaporate slightly faster. Liquid nitrogen is safer and is preferred to liquid oxygen as a cryogenic liquid

Liquid nitrogen is safer than liquid oxygen.....???

jmdewey, you can't get around it, jet fuel is explosive, especially when something ignites it. The liquid oxygen provides the oxygen necessary to
burn.

And jmdewey, have you ever seen a kerosene explosion? There are way too many videos and links to provide.

Actually jet fuel doesn't have liquid oxygen. But kerosene vapors are quite explosive without liquid oxygen involved. It's like gasoline, but more
explosive.

And it exploded on 9/11. I am just amazed how people can't seem to grasp that the explosions were the result of a plane crash. I don't understand
how they can say this knowing about planes exploding in crashes. It's not like 9/11 was the first time planes exploded.

I am from Ohio and every time we had the Dayton Air Show, we were always reminded of plane crashes and how they explode. How is it possible for planes
to explode in every other circumstance except when flying into buildings?

What have I defined, jmdewey? Apparently YOU are the one who doesn't know what explosion means.

If you wanted to, you could blow
up a paper bag and smash it between your hands, making a loud "bang" sound, and call it an explosion, but it would not be technically correct to state
your conclusion that therefore paper bags are an explosive material.

It's classified as flammable, but that doesn't mean it doesn't explode. There are dozens of reports by experts every year, that report kerosene
explosions.

If kerosene doesn't explode, why does 10,000 gallons of it (roughly what was left on the planes at the time of impact), convert to over 330 tons of
TNT? It shouldn't convert at all if it doesn't explode.

What have I defined, jmdewey? Apparently YOU are the one who doesn't know what explosion means.

If you wanted to, you could
blow up a paper bag and smash it between your hands, making a loud "bang" sound, and call it an explosion, but it would not be technically correct
to state your conclusion that therefore paper bags are an explosive material.

edit on 23-9-2013 by jmdewey60 because: (no reason given)

Does the paper bag meet all the requirements of explosion according to the definition?

"the sudden, loud, and violent release of energy that happens when something (such as a bomb) breaks apart in a way that sends parts flying
outward"

The sudden release of air from the blown paper bag still produces a blast wave. If you filled the bag with a flammable gas, such as oxygen, and then
blew the paper bag over a match, then the paper bag, by nature of being a flammable fuel material, will still catch on fire.

What you aren't able to see is the fact that fuel tanks are simply containers for fuel, and that a breach of that container near an open flame will
indeed cause an explosion.

Your car is internal combustion, each piston works because of tiny explosions of air meeting gas in a controlled environment. Obviously you don't
understand that gas and gaseous state are the same thing. Jet fuel is liquid gas, that has not yet come to a gaseous state, but at the same time, the
vapors of jet fuel, are at gaseous state.

And if you shake a can of Coca Cola (or Pepsi, or whatever), the carbon dioxide, GAS, is excited and quickly releases the contents all over you when
you open it. That is intrinsically an explosion.

Nothing in the definition of explosion requires anything flammable, jmdewey, you just added that in yourself. But when you have a flammable material,
an excited gas, and an ignition factor, then you will have a flammable explosion. But each one of them have a blast wave, because that's the release
of energy. Remind me how your soda blows all over your face when your soda is just a liquid?

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